Physiological Tremor Increases when Skeletal Muscle is Shortened: Implications for Fusimotor Control
Kian Jalaleddini, Akira Nagamori, Christopher M Laine, Mahsa A., Golkar, RObert E. Kearney, Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas

TL;DR
This study shows that physiological tremor amplitude increases when skeletal muscles are shortened, and this is explained by modulation of fusimotor drive rather than muscle length alone, with implications for understanding motor control.
Contribution
It demonstrates the necessity of length-dependent gamma-static fusimotor drive modulation to explain tremor behavior, advancing understanding of neuromechanical interactions in motor control.
Findings
Tremor amplitude increases as calf muscles shorten.
Changing muscle length alone does not explain tremor changes.
Gamma-static fusimotor drive modulation is required to replicate experimental results.
Abstract
The involuntary force fluctuations associated with physiological (as distinct from pathological) tremor are an unavoidable component of human motor control. While the origins of the physiological tremor are known to depend on muscle afferentation, it is possible that the mechanical properties of muscle-tendon systems also affect its generation, amplification and maintenance. In this paper, we investigated the dependence of physiological tremor during tonic, isometric plantarflextion torque at 30% of maximum at three ankle angles. The amplitude of physiological tremor increased as calf muscles shortened in contrast to the stretch reflex whose amplitude decreases as muscle shortens. We used a closed-loop simulation model of afferented muscle to explore the mechanisms responsible for this behavior. We demonstrate that changing muscle lengths does not suffice to explain our experimental…
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